Pizzetti’s
                    music is not particularly well represented on disc. There
                    are, however, two Hyperion discs: one of his choral music
              (CDA67017) and another with some of his orchestral works including
                    the suite from La Pisanella (CDA67084 with Rondo
                    Veneziano, Preludio a un altro
                    giorno and Tre Preludii Sinfonici (per L'Edipo
                    Re)). Many years ago, during the LP era, Lamberto
                    Gardelli and the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande recorded
                    the second, fourth and fifth
                    movements from the suite, and the Concerto de l’estate.
                    That is what we have here. Both pieces are good examples
                    of Pizzetti’s Neo-classicism: colourful, superbly scored
                    music in much the same vein as Pizzetti’s somewhat older
                    contemporary Respighi. La Pisanella is a ballet
                    written to a libretto by Gabriel D’Annunzio for Ida Rubinstein.
                    They had made a success of their collaboration with Debussy
                    with Le Martyre de Saint Sébastien composed
                    two years earlier. Pizzetti had already collaborated with
                    D’Annunzio in the incidental music for D’Annunzio’s La
                    Nave. Concerto de l’estate (“Summer Concerto”)
                    is a concerto for orchestra, a genre that attracted attention
                    from several Italian composers, such as Virigilio Mortari
                    (incidentally a pupil of Pizzetti) and – more importantly – Goffredo
                    Petrassi. As might be expected, this is sunny, optimistic
                    music of great charm. It has much in common with Respighi’s
                    colourful scores. Pizzetti knows how to write for orchestra
                    without bluntly imitating his model. No groundbreaking masterpiece,
                    but an immensely enjoyable work that certainly deserves to
                    be heard from time to time. Gardelli obviously loves the
                    music and conducts excellent performances. The 1966 recording
                    does not show its age and still sounds remarkably well.
                
                 
                
                
                Respighi’s
                    own Trittico Botticelliano needs little comment;
                    it is one of his best-known scores, and one of his finest
                    orchestral compositions. The composer managed to draw an
                    extraordinarily rich and varied palette from deliberately
                    small forces. Respighi’s orchestral music can be “showy” and
                    a bit vulgar as in Feste Romane or in Belkis,
                    Regina di Saba. He often veers into a style that
                    might have been designed for some Hollywood spectacular.
                    Nothing of that sort in the delicately and often quite subtly
                    scored Trittico, which comes off wonderfully
                    in Heltay’s magnificent reading, possibly one of the finest
                    ever.
                
                 
                
                Although
                    I much admire Rota’s film music, I have never been a real
                    fan of his concert output. I was thus really delighted to
                    hear his Concerto per archi composed for I
                    Musici. It is a marvellous work in four concise movements,
                    in an idiom that often nods towards Bartók and Shostakovich
                    - try the second and fourth movements. There’s virile, energetic
                    string writing in a harmonically stringent idiom that makes
                    its point without any fuss but with a remarkable efficiency.
                    A splendid work then that should be heard and recorded more
                    often. Needless to say: I Musici’s reading is impeccable.
                
                 
                
                Even
                    if some of these works now exist in modern recordings, these
                    readings deserved to be re-issued; and it is good to have
                    them back again. This disc is well worth having especially
                    for the Respighi and the Rota.
                
                 
                    
                    Hubert Culot